Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

AOL to Raise Dialup Prices 272

United Bimmer writes "America Online has announced that it's going to raise the price on dialup users in an attempt to encourage them to upgrade to broadband. The new rates will near $26 a month, already drastically higher than the market norm for dialup access. This will bring the dialup prices to almost the exact same per month as broadband depending on your plan. However through this, they do still offer an unadvertised lower price for those who can't get or don't want broadband can request lower-priced plans, including an unadvertised offering of about $18 with a one-year commitment."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

AOL to Raise Dialup Prices

Comments Filter:
  • by panaceaa ( 205396 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @06:28PM (#14780272) Homepage Journal
    Time to add AOL to the list of great [wikipedia.org] moments [segway.com] in pricing [caldera.com] failures [neo-geo.com].
  • I saw it coming (Score:2, Interesting)

    by spazoidspam ( 708589 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @06:31PM (#14780295)
    To be honest, I saw this coming. Not just at AOL, but it is very forseeable that dial-up prices will only go up, and broadband prices will go down, or it will get faster. Just think about it, doesnt dial-up require a dedicated connection? Just like making a phone call? Where adding additional users to a broadband system just eats up more bandwidth from the large and growing pool. AOL might be jumping the gun and doing it before dial-up costs actually rise, but as the telcos lose their traditional phone customers to VoIP, a normal phone line will just get more and more expensive.
  • by hirschma ( 187820 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @06:55PM (#14780480)
    AOL is actually being pretty crafty about this.

    They know that there's a huge number of subscribers that are scared shitless about leaving the warm embrace of AOL, and they just won't leave. They figure that some folks will upgrade to AOL broadband, and AOL makes more money on this folks. Others will pay double, even triple for phone dial-up. Just to not lose that wonderful interface. They'll even suffer pain, case in point:

    I'm seeing this girl that's just scared to death of computers. AOL auto updated to the new version, and just totally screwed her computer in the process. This is not enough to get her to quit AOL. I fix her computer, requiring a complete OS reinstall, and set it to an older less toxic version... her stupid brother pops in an AOL 9.0 CD to upgrade it. It upgrades to 9.0, and then the cheap ass CD shatters from the high rotation rate of her 56x CD-ROM drive immediately post-install - totally destroys it. Then the software again does a number on her computer... and she still will not quit AOL.

    Hell, AOL is now learning what drug dealers have know for a while, and are going to make bucks on it.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @07:05PM (#14780559)
    Fast-Food Ice Dirtier Than Toilet Water
    http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/print?id=1641825 [go.com]
  • Re:AOL is free. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by angrykeyboarder ( 791722 ) <mr.scott.beamer@gmail . c om> on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @08:02PM (#14780944) Homepage Journal
    That process is more complicated than you indicate. It's not worth the effort to bother with more more than once.

    And I've heard that after having done it 3 times they don't offer you any more free time.
  • by loose_cannon_gamer ( 857933 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @08:06PM (#14780979)
    First, disclaimer. I have used AOL in the long distant past, and if it is still the same as it used to be, well, $-40 might be the right monthly rate (that is, they pay you enough to replace the computer they screw up).

    Second... my parents (mid 50's aged) used to be stuck with a high cost ISP through a deal they got at work. When their contract expired, they switched to your average nation $10 / month dialup ISP (Qwest has decided their neighborhood doesn't warrant DSL, although they live in a suburb and cable is readily available, but overpriced for their budget).

    This new ISP, unlike the old expensive one, is awful. Heaven help you if you want to send UDP traffic because it gets dropped, constantly (and on dialup, that is in fact the end of the world). Disconnections every 20 minutes, minimum. Plus, a real PITA interface with 'pop-up' blockers and 'virus scanners' that take down the web connection with frightening frequency while in fact neither blocking popups nor catching viruses and spyware. I know because, as most of you, I get the call to fix it when it is broken, and I *used* to be able to play games like Starcraft (pure UDP) with my little brother, back in the day...

    This isn't just a complaint post, though. There's a market hiding in there. Specifically, I would consider recommending an ISP who charged more money in exchange for services that were actually valuable. Like ISP to backbone latency guarantees, or never a dropped packet on their network (which requires quite a bit of expensive redundant hardware and a willingness to not sell all available bandwidth), or any of a host of other non-intrusive services. You want to scan for viruses? Scan the packets before they get to me. A popup blocker? I use a *real* webrowser, I don't need it. Your ridiculous dialer app that wraps internet explorer? Just give me a phone number and an 8 line instruction page for setting up a modem shortcut.

    For the right price, it *must* be possible to actually provide a true, clean, non-intrusive high quality connection at the advertised speed. Is that AOL? Probably not. But it if existed, it would be worth considering, even at $26 for dialup. The older I get, the more I am interested in exchanging my money for quality goods and services. I care about price, but I care more about what I'm getting than how much I'm getting it for. I am willing to pay more to avoid having MSN, AOL, Earthlink or any other such ISP manage my broadband connection, from experience with each of those.

    Is there such a thing as a 'luxury' ISP? Maybe there should be.

  • Dialup v. DSL (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Kozar_The_Malignant ( 738483 ) on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @08:30PM (#14781104)
    A couple of years ago, I spouted off here about why I was happy with dialup at home even though DSL was available. The reasons I gave were
    • T3 access at work for those .iso downloads
    • Don't do much online gaming
    • Better control of the kid's access
    • Cost

    Things have changed. Although I was happy with my local ISP, SBC DSL is now cheaper (I live in a rural area where a lot of those $10 deals aren't available). Only child still at home is now in college, and she needs better access. We both do some online gaming. I switched to DSL without any regret except the loss of a locally maintained Usenet spool.

    Now that I have a nice wireless network set up at home, I have found an added fringe benefit; backup network access through my neighbors who don't share my ideas about security.

  • Re:Its an outrage! (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 22, 2006 @10:31PM (#14781657)
    I have to say that it is a cost issue for me! Mediacom here charges $55 a month, and that is if you also have cable tv from them. I have heard from others that its $65 if you don't also have cable tv from Mediacom! Sorry, but thats just too much for me to spend for internet access. DSL is slower and still costs $39.95 a month after the 6 month introductory offer expires. I wish that ALL cable tv and Internet service providers were required to publically list the final cost of providing the average houshold with cable tv/internet service. I don't think that Mediacom can justify the extremely high prices they charge. I wish there was some comprtition in this area to bring prices down!

    AOHELL is already overpriced, and people in this area who use AOHELL complain of busy signals and poor connections all the time. I use PeoplePC, pay $10.95 a month, have good connect speeds, and have never heard a busy signal!

"If I do not want others to quote me, I do not speak." -- Phil Wayne

Working...